ABSTRACT

As the rates of chronic diseases, like diabetes, asthma and obesity skyrocket, research is showing that the built environment – the way our cities and towns are developed – contributes to the epidemic rates of these diseases. It is unlikely that those who planned and developed these places envisioned these situations. Public health, community development planning, and other fields influencing the built environment have operated in isolation for much of recent history, with the result being places that public health advocates have labelled, ‘designed for disease’. The sad irony of this is that planning and public health arose together, in response to the need to create health standards, zoning and building codes to combat the infectious diseases that were prevalent in the industrializing cities of late nineteenth and early twentieth century America. In recent years, the dramatic rise in chronic disease rates in cities and towns has begun to bring public health and planning back together to promote development pattern and policies facilitating physical activity and neighbourly interactions as antidotes. In this book, a number of such community development efforts are highlighted, bringing attention to the need to coordinate planning, community development and health policy.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Community Development

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

Community development approaches to public health: people creating places where the healthy choice is the easy choice

chapter |15 pages

I can do it, you can do it

A community development approach to health promotion for individuals with disabilities

chapter |15 pages

Community-wide obesity prevention

Re-connecting public health, urban planning, and public policy in three Missouri communities

chapter |14 pages

Opportunity for Unity collaborative

Building healthy communities by empowering young adults

chapter |12 pages

Home grown

The trials and triumphs of starting up a farmers' market in Waianae, Hawaii

chapter |13 pages

Farmers' markets in low income communities

Impact of community environment, food programs and public policy

chapter |19 pages

Ciclovìa in Chicago

A strategy for community development to improve public health

chapter |13 pages

Nuestro futuro saludable

Connecting public health research and community development in partnership to build a healthy environment

chapter |18 pages

Public health agenda setting in Louisiana

An applied index and implications for community development policy